DocumentCode
3712167
Title
Effects on the results of the fall of potential test when using sky wires for the remote current probe
Author
Eduardo H. Enrique
Author_Institution
Stantec Consulting Ltd, 49 Frederick St., Kitchener, ON N2H 6M7, Canada
fYear
2015
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
As specified in the electrical codes, a solar farm grounding system must be measured to determine if its resistance is equal to or lower than the resistance predicted by the design. The methods of choice for this measurement are the fall of potential test and the slope test. As described in IEEE 81-2012, in order for these two methods to give meaningful results, the remote current probe must be located at a distance of at least five times the largest dimension of the solar farm footprint. To comply with this requirement, some contractors have recently introduced the use sky wires of nearby sub transmission lines to inject the test current at a remote location. This paper presents the analysis of the errors introduced by the use of sky wires in the fall of potential test.
Keywords
"Grounding","Resistance","Wiring","Power transmission lines","Substations","Electrical resistance measurement","Transmission line measurements"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Industry Applications Society Annual Meeting, 2015 IEEE
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IAS.2015.7356923
Filename
7356923
Link To Document